Lember Margus
Department of Polyclinic, Family Medicine and Internal Medicine, University of Tartu, Estonia.
Int J Health Plann Manage. 2002 Jan-Mar;17(1):41-53. doi: 10.1002/hpm.651.
The socialist bloc of post-war Europe was obliged to follow the Soviet example with a hierarchical, centrally controlled health care system based on polyclinics and other facilities providing extensive specialist services at the first level of contact. All the countries of Central and Eastern Europe have now expressed their wish to totally change their health care systems. Changes in these countries include: the introduction of market economy mechanisms in health care, an increased focus on population health needs in guiding health care systems, and the possibility of introducing a more general type of care at primary level. Patient expectations of access, choice and convenience are factors in shaping new models of health care delivery. Appropriate timing is the key determinant of the success of reforms. In Estonia the beginning of the 1990s was the time when several interest groups in society supported changes in the health care system. The first step after regaining independence was the reintroduction of a Bismarck-type insurance system. In the late 1990s the primary care reforms have changed the initial plans and elements of a National Health Service were introduced, especially general practitioners' lists, capitation payment and gate-keeping principles. The family medicine reform in Estonia has two main objectives: introduction of general practice as a specialty into Estonian health care and changing the remuneration system of primary care doctors. The specific tasks are: to provide practising primary care doctors with opportunities for retraining to gain the specialty status of a general practitioner, to create a list system for the population to register with a primary care doctor, to introduce a partial gate-keeping system and to give the status of the independent contractor to primary care doctors.
战后欧洲的社会主义阵营不得不效仿苏联,建立一个层级分明、中央控制的医疗体系,该体系以多诊所及其他设施为基础,在一级医疗接触层面提供广泛的专科服务。中东欧所有国家如今都表示希望彻底改变其医疗体系。这些国家的变革包括:在医疗保健领域引入市场经济机制,在指导医疗体系时更加关注民众的健康需求,以及在初级医疗层面引入更普遍的医疗类型。患者对就医机会、选择和便利性的期望是塑造新型医疗服务模式的因素。恰当的时机是改革成功的关键决定因素。在爱沙尼亚,20世纪90年代初是社会上几个利益集团支持医疗体系变革的时期。恢复独立后的第一步是重新引入俾斯麦式保险制度。20世纪90年代末,初级医疗改革改变了最初的计划,并引入了国家医疗服务体系的一些要素,特别是全科医生名单、按人头付费和守门原则。爱沙尼亚的家庭医学改革有两个主要目标:将全科医疗作为一个专科引入爱沙尼亚医疗体系,以及改变初级医疗医生的薪酬体系。具体任务包括:为执业初级医疗医生提供再培训机会,使其获得全科医生的专科地位;建立一个让民众向初级医疗医生登记的名单系统;引入部分守门制度;赋予初级医疗医生独立承包商的地位。